Crypto
Terraform Labs files for bankruptcy amid SEC lawsuit
Terraform Labs, the company behind failed stablecoin TerraUSD, has filed for bankruptcy as it faces lawsuits from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and in Singapore.
The Singapore-based crypto firm filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Sunday in Delaware, according to court documents shared with The Hill. Terraform Labs claimed assets between $100 million and $500 million and liabilities of the same monetary range.
“The Terra community and ecosystem have shown unprecedented resilience in the face of adversity, and this action is necessary to allow us to continue working toward our collective goals while resolving the legal challenges that remain outstanding,” Terraform Labs CEO Chris Amani said in a statement.
“This step protects our ability to continue working with the community on infrastructure, innovative tools and products, and other ecosystem support.”
Terraform Labs and its founder, Do Kwon, are facing legal and financial peril for the company’s role in the cryptocurrency crash of 2022.
The company developed the Terra blockchain, which supported the cryptocurrency Luna and a stablecoin called USDTerra. While Luna’s price was intended to rise and fall akin to other cryptocurrencies, USDTerra was supposed to stay equivalent with the U.S. dollar.
Both coins, however, collapsed in May 2022 amid a broader decline in crypto prices, wiping out more than $44 billion in Luna and USDTerra investments. Both the company and Kwon are facing legal action from the SEC and in Singapore.
The Terra network and Kwon grew in prominence as crypto boomed and the industry began flexing its muscle. Terra had inked a five-year, multimillion-dollar sponsorship deal with the Washington Nationals baseball team just three months before its collapse.
“We have overcome significant challenges before and, against long odds, the ecosystem survived and even grew in new ways post-depeg; we look forward to the successful resolution of the outstanding legal proceedings,” Amani said in a statement.
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Crypto
Arthur Hayes Outlines Conditional Bitcoin Bull Case Tied to Fed Balance Sheet
Crypto
Exclusive: White House set to meet with banks, crypto companies to broker legislation compromise
Jan 28 (Reuters) – The White House on Monday will meet with executives from the banking and cryptocurrency industries to discuss a path forward for landmark crypto legislation which has stalled due to a clash between the two powerful sectors, said three industry sources.
The summit hosted by the White House’s crypto council will include executives from several trade groups. It will focus on how the bill treats interest and other rewards crypto firms can dish out on customer holdings of dollar-pegged tokens known as stablecoins, the people said.
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Reuters was first to report the meeting.
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The sources declined to be identified discussing private policy discussions.
“We look forward to continuing to work with policymakers across the aisle so Congress can advance lasting market structure legislation and ensure the United States remains the crypto capital of the world,” she said.
Cody Carbone, CEO of The Digital Chamber, another major crypto trade group, credited the White House with “pulling all sides to the negotiating table.”
The Senate has for months been working on the bill, dubbed the Clarity Act, which aims to create federal rules for digital assets, the culmination of years of crypto industry lobbying. Crypto companies have long argued that existing rules are inadequate for digital assets, and that legislation is essential for companies to continue to operate with legal certainty in the U.S.
The House of Representatives passed its version of the bill in July.
The Senate Banking Committee was scheduled earlier this month to debate and vote on the bill, but the meeting was postponed at the last minute, in part due to concerns among lawmakers and both industries over the interest issue.
Crypto companies say providing rewards such as interest is crucial for recruiting new customers and that barring them from doing so would be anti-competitive. Banks say the increased competition could result in insured lenders experiencing an exodus of deposits — the primary source of funding for most banks — potentially threatening financial stability.
That bill prohibited stablecoin issuers from paying interest on cryptocurrencies, but banks say it left open a loophole that would allow for third parties – such as crypto exchanges – to pay yield on tokens, creating new competition for deposits.
Reporting by Hannah Lang in New York; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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